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Encyclopedia Britannica



PATRICK, ST

This article appears in Volume V20, Page 934 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PAS-PER
PATRICK, ST , the patron saint of Ireland,z was probably born chosen envoy of Rome, but now Germanus seems to have
decided that Patrick was the man for the task, and he was
about the year 389. He was the son of a deacon, Calpurnius, and consecrated in 432. For the peculiar social conditicns with
which the Christian missionary would he confronted in Ireland
see BREHON LAWS and IRELAND: Early History. Suffice it to
say here that the land belonged to the tribes, and that the success
of Patrick's undertaking depended entirely on his ability to gain
the goodwill of the tribal kings and chiefs of clans. We are
totally ignorant as to the extent and number of the pre-Patrician
Christian communities in Ireland. It seems probable that they
were, largely, if not wholly confined to the south-east of the island.
His Roman name has also survived in a hibernicized form, Patrick landed at Inverdea, the mouth of the river Vartry in
Cothrige, with the common substitution of Irish c for Brythonic I Wicklow, but we are not informed as to any of his doings in
p (cf. Irish cast, Lat. pascha). Patrick was doubtless educated Leinster at this period. According to the story, he immediately
as a Christian and was imbued with reverence for the Roman proceeded northward to the kingdom of Ulidia (east Ulster),
Empire. When about sixteen years of age he was carried off by a though a certain tradition represents him as going to Meath.
Landing on the shores of Strangford Lough, he commenced his
labours in the plain on the south-west side of that inlet. A
convert
chief
  named Dichu granted him a site for an establish-
ment, and a wooden barn is stated to have been utilized for the
purpose of
worship
 , whence the modern Saul (Ir. saball, " barn ").
Patrick's activity was bound to bring him sooner or later into
conflict with the High-king Loigaire (reigned 428-467), son of
Niall Noigiallach. Fedilmid, a brother of the monarch, is
represented as having made over his estate at Trim to the saint
to found a church, and thus the faith was established within
Loigaire's territory. The story in picturesque fashion makes
Patrick challenge the royal authority by lighting the Paschal
fire on the hill of Slane on the night of Easter Eve. It chanced
to be the occasion of a
pagan
  festival at Tara, during which no
fire might be kindled until the royal fire had been lit. A number
of trials of skill between the Christian missionary and Loigaire's
Druids ensue, and the final result seems to have been that the
monarch, though unwilling to embrace the foreign creed, under-
took to protect the Christian bishop. At a later date the saint
was probably invited by Loigaire to take part in the codification
of the Senchus M6r in order to represent the interests of the
Christian communities. On another occasion Patrick is reported
to have overthrown a famous idol known as Gems Cruaich or
Cromm Cruaich in the plain of Mag Slecht (county Cavan).
Several churches seem to have been founded in the kingdom
of Meath by the saint, but they cannot now be identified.
Patrick is stated to 'have visited Connaught on three different
occasions and to have founded churches, one of the most impor-
tant being that at Elphin. As regards Ulster our information
is very scanty; though we find him establishing churches in the
three kingdoms of the province (Ailech, Oriel and Ulidia).
Patrick's work is more closely identified with the north of Ireland
than with the south. Traces of his mission, however, are to be
found in Ossory and Muskerry. But his task in the south was
doubtless rather that of an organizer, and a kind of circular letter
has come down to us which was addressed by Patrick, Auxilius
and Iserninus, to all the clergy of the island. There is some
his natural diffidence, and opposition on the part of his relatives, Patrick resolved to return to Gaul in order to prepare himself for his mission. He proceeded to Auxerrea place which seems to have had a close connexion with Britain and Irelandand was ordained deacon by Bishop Amator, along with two others who were afterwards associated with him in spreading the faith in Ireland. The one was an Irishman called Fith, better known as Iserninus, the other Auxilius. Patrick must have spent at least fourteen years at Auxerre.
It seems not unlikely that Pelagianism had taken root among
seq.; Du Cange, Glossarium med. et infim. latinitatis, s.v. " Patricius" (431-432), whom Zimmer has endeavoured to identify with and histories of Charlemagne (q.v.; and his successors. For the Ger- , Patrick, is obscure. Tradition associates his name with the man Patriziertum see Roth von Schreckenstein, Des Patriziat in den mountains of Wicklow, and we are told that he retired to the deutschen Stadten, besonders Reiclstadten (2nd ed. Freiburg, 1886) ; land of the Picts in North Britain, where he died. Patrick
Foltz, Beitrage zur Gesch. des Patriziats in den deutschen Stadten (Marburg, 1899).
subsequently conferred on Charlemagne at his coronation, and borne, as we gather from medieval documents, indiscriminately, not only by subsequent emperors, but also by a long line of Burgundian rulers and minor princes of the middle ages generally.' On the fall of the Carolingian house the title passed to Alberic II. Subsequently it was held by John Crescentius, and many leading men who received it from Otto III. (e.g. Boleslaw Chabri of Poland). In ro46 it returned to the German Henry III. The emperor Frederick Barbarossa was the last to wear the insignia (in 1167).
the grandson of a presbyter named Potitus. His father was a middle-class landed proprietor and a decurion, who is represented as living at a place called Bannauenta. The only place of this name we know is Daventry, but it seems more probable that Patrick's home is to be sought near the Severn, and Rhys conjectures that one of the three places called Banwen in Glamorgan-shire may be intended. The British name of the future apostle was Sucat, to which Mod. Welsh hygad, " warlike," corresponds.
band of Irish marauders. The latter were possibly taking part in the raid of the Irish king Niall Noigiallach, who met with his end in Britain in 405. Irish tradition represents the future apostle as tending the herds of a chieftain of the name of Miliucc (Milchu), near the mountain called Slemish in county Antrim, but Bury tries to show that the scene of his captivity was Connaught, perhaps in the neighbourhood of Croagh Patrick. His bondage lasted for six years. During this time he became subject to religious emotion and beheld visions which encouraged him to effect his escape. He fled, in all probability to the coast of Wicklow, and encountered a vessel which was engaged in the export of Irish wolf-dogs. After three days at sea the traders landed, possibly on the west coast of Gaul, and journeyed for twenty-eight days through a desert. At the end of two months Patrick parted from his companions and betook himself to the monastery of Lerins, where he probably spent a few years. On leaving the Mediterranean he seems to have returned home. It was doubtless during this stay in Britain that the idea of missionary enterprise in Ireland came to him. In a dream he saw a man named Victorious bearing innumerable epistles, one of which he received and read; the beginning of it contained the words " The Voice of the Irish "; whilst repeating these words he says, " I imagined that I heard in my mind the voice of those who were near the wood of Foclut (Fochlad), which is near the western sea, and thus they cried: ` We pray thee, holy youth, to come and walk again amongst us as before.' " The forest of Fochlad was in the neighbourhood of Killala Bay, but it is possible that it extended considerably to the south. Despite
1 We even find a feminine form, patricissa, for the wife of a patricius. The golden circlet worn on the head by the patricius as a symbol of his dignity was called a patricians circulus.
2 His career is involved in considerable obscurity. Widely varying views have been held by modern scholars with regard to his activity, some going so far as to treat all the accounts of his labours as the fictitious creation of a later age. In the present article Bury's reconstruction of the saint's life has been chiefly followed. Apart from its importance in other respects, Bury's treatment of the subject has at any rate the merit of defending the traditional view of St Patrick's career.
evidence that he made a journey to Rome (441443) and brought back with him valuable relics. On his return he founded the church and monastery of
Armagh
 , the site of which was granted him by Daire, king of Oriel, and it is probable that the see was intended by him to be specially connected with the supreme ecclesiastical authority. Some years before his death, which took place in 461, Patrick resigned his position as bishop of
Armagh
  to his disciple Benignus, and possibly retired to Saul in Dalaradia, where he spent the remainder of his life. The place of his burial was a matter of dispute in early Ireland, but it seems most likely that he was interred at Saul.
Two highly important documents purporting to have been written by Patrick have come down to us. Although the genuineness of these writings has been impugned on various occasions by different scholars, there seems to be no reason for assuming that they did not emanate from the saint's pen. The one is the
Confession
 , which is contained in an imperfect state in the Book of Armagh (c. 8o7), but complete copies are found in later MSS. The
Confession
 , written towards the end of his life, gives a general account of his career. Various charges had been brought against him by his enemies, among them that of illiteracy, the truth of which is borne out by the crudeness of his style, and is fully admitted by the writer himself. Before being admitted to deacon's orders he had communicated to a friend some fault which he had committed when about fifteen years of age. This friend had not considered it an obstacle to ordination. Later the
secret
  was betrayed and came to the ears of persons who, as he says, " urged my sins against my laborious episcopate." It is impossible to ascertain who these detractors werepossibly British fellow-workers in Ireland. The other document is the so-called Letter to Coroticus. The soldiers of Coroticus (Ceretic), a British king of Strathclyde, had in the course of a raid in Ireland killed a number of Christian neophytes on the very day of their baptism while still clad in white garments. Others had been carried off into slavery, and a deputation of clergy which Patrick had sent to ask for their release had been subjected to ridicule. In his Letter the saint in very strong language urges the Christian subjects of the British king not to have any dealings with their ruler and his bloodthirsty followers until full satisfaction should have been made. The text of this letter occurs in a number of MSS. but is not contained in the Book of Armagh. It is however certain that it was known in the 7th century. A strange barbaric chant commonly known as the Lorica or Hymn of St Patrick is preserved in the Liber hymnorum. This piece, called in Irish the Faed Fiada or " Cry of the Deer," contains a number of remarkable grammatical forms, and the latest editors are of
opinion
  that it may very well be genuine. From such slender material it is not easy to form a clear conception of the saint's personality. His was evidently an intensely spiritual nature, and in addition to the qualities which go to form a strong man of action he must have possessed an enthusiasm which enabled him to surmount all difficulties. His importance in the history of Ireland and the Irish Church consists in the fact that he brought Ireland into
touch
  with western Europe and more particularly with Rome, and that he introduced Latin into Ireland as the language of the Church. His work consisted largely in organizing the Christian societies which he found in existence on his arrival, and in planting the faith in regions such as the extreme west of Connaught which had not yet come under the sway of the gospel.
Karts published by Whitley Stokes for. the Rolls
series
  (1887). A Latin translation of a different copy of this work, now lost, was published by Colgan. Lastly a life by an otherwise unknown Irish writer named Probus occurs in the Basel edition of Bede's works (1563) and was reprinted by Colgan.
See J. B. Bury, The Life of St Patrick and his Place in History (London, 1905) ; J. H. Todd, St Patrick the Apostle of Ireland (Dublin, 1861) ; H. Zimmer, article " Keltische Kirche " in Realencyklopadie firer protestantische Theologie and Kirche (1901; trans. by Miss Meyer, " The Celtic Church in Britain and Ireland," London, 1902) ; J. Gwynn, Liber Ardmachanus; Whitley Stokes, The Tripartite Life of St Patrick (London, 1887) ; N. J. D. White, " The Writings of St Patrick " (critical edition) in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy (1904). (E. C. Q.)


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